Shock breakout is the brightest radiative phenomenon in a Type II supernova
(SN). Although it was predicted to be bright, the direct observation is
difficult due to the short duration and X-ray/ultraviolet-peaked spectra. First
entire observations of the shock breakouts of Type II Plateau SNe (SNe IIP)
were reported in 2008 by ultraviolet and optical observations by the {\it
GALEX} satellite and supernova legacy survey (SNLS), named SNLS-04D2dc and
SNLS-06D1jd. We present multicolor light curves of a SN IIP, including the
shock breakout and plateau, calculated with a multigroup radiation
hydrodynamical code {\sc STELLA} and an evolutionary progenitor model. The
synthetic multicolor light curves reproduce well the observations of
SNLS-04D2dc. This is the first study to reproduce the ultraviolet light curve
of the shock breakout and the optical light curve of the plateau consistently.
We conclude that SNLS-04D2dc is the explosion with a canonical explosion energy
1.2×1051 ergs and that its progenitor is a star with a zero-age
main-sequence mass 20M⊙ and a presupernova radius 800R⊙. The
model demonstrates that the peak apparent B-band magnitude of the shock
breakout would be mB∼26.4 mag if a SN being identical to
SNLS-04D2dc occurs at a redshift z=1, which can be reached by 8m-class
telescopes. The result evidences that the shock breakout has a great potential
to detect SNe IIP at z\gsim1.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal Letter